Many diseases so familiar to those of us in the study of infectious disease (ID) are of zoonotic, or animal, origin. It’s a long, chilling list – AIDs, SARs, Ebola, West Nile Virus, and dengue hemorrhagic fever are just a few well-known examples. What’s worse is that those just listed have only emerged in the past two decades (1). Frightening stuff. Here’s another alarming statistic: a staggering 75% of novel emerging diseases are of zoonotic origin (2).

One of the most exciting work in the studies of emerging infectious diseases (EID) and, in particular, zoonotic diseases is the work of Nathan Wolfe and his team at the Global Viral Forecasting Initiative. Their pioneering research has primarily focused on the origin and evolution of major IDs amongst mankind, many of which can be traced to originating with animals of different species. The wild animal and human interface seems to be a very rich source of new travel destinations for microbes.

As such, the best place for examining the “who, what, how and why” of novel EIDs, this so-called “viral chatter”, is to venture into regions where this real-life experiment is on-going. For Wolfe and his team, that means examining communities in African forests that rely on the bushmeat trade as a livelihood. By looking at anthropoid primates and their homegrown diseases, Wolfe’s team may give us greater insight into the latest zoonotic disease that may visit a closely related primate, the human. If you’re into gambling, maybe we could even predict a disease that’ll make a lasting jump from a previously wild reservoir into human civilization.

Wolfe’s most seminal research looks at a virus endemic in most Old World primates native to Africa and Asia. The virus, simian foamy virus (SFV), is a blood-borne, non-fatal virus that is genetically similar to HIV. Wolfe and his team have looked at the presence SFV of in humans as a transmission marker to examine the potential of other such similar viral transmission events between humans and primates. As expected, the more contact people have with primates, especially that of blood and bodily fluids as a result of meat butchering, the greater the likelihood is that they have antibodies to SFV, an indication of immunological exposure to the virus (3).

Previous research examining the phylogenies of HIV-1 and HIV-2, as well as the closely related simian immunodeficiency viruses (SIVs), indicate that the viruses had on the order of eight separate transmission between African monkeys and apes (3). Wolfe’s research gives as a bit of an idea of what the plot background was with those eight separate transmissions, in which these viruses were metaphorically hopscotching between primates and humans and prior to their permanent entry into mankind.

A bushmeat hunter & his kill: a still from Wolfes TED talk

Wolfe’s team is also engaged in viral monitoring in which they track zoonotic viruses with the assistance of bushmeat hunters in Cameroon. Trained hunters take blood samples from their kill by dripping small drops of blood into prepared filter papers that will later serve as samples for their fantastic investigate work into the transmission history between retroviruses (4). Blood samples are also taken from the hunters themselves so as to monitor any evidence of cross-species viral infection with their prey. This surveillance research complements their molecular and phylogenetic based work in that they can monitor the current catalog of viruses in the wild and any potential real-time transmissions between wild animals and bushmeat hunters. Already they have discovered several new retroviruses genetically similar to HIV (5). You can check out his genuinely inspiring talk on TED and get a better idea of the project.

Asking just these kinds of questions is of the utmost importance in the public health field. ID’s already account for 16% of global deaths as is and there are more lurking in the jungles just waiting for some human-wild animal interface (2). Remember the SARS pandemic in 2002? That’s a great example of the sticky, tangled interactions between zoonoses, the bushmeat trade and international travel. An unfamiliar member of the coronavirus family (the common cold is also a member), Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS-CoV) virus had never been seen before in humans and it was quite the introduction. In the span of over six months, the extraordinarily infectious virus had infected more than 8,000 people and killed 774 people around the world, 347 of those on the Chinese mainland (6). The virus has the ignoble title of initiating the first pandemic of the 21st century.

As the virus swept China and started appearing in nearby countries, blame focused upon the civet cat, whose meat is considered a great delicacy in Southern China. Many of the earliest cases of SARS were professionals with heavy involved in the bushmeat trade in the Guangdong Province, ranging from breeding, butchering, selling and even preparing and serving civet cat meat (7). Immediate culling of the carnivores, along with two other suspects, the raccoon dog and Chinese ferret badger, commenced in the hope that with the elimination of the primary source, transmission rates would plummet and end the pandemic (8). However, recent research has implicated bats of the genus Rhinolophus as the natural, unaffected reservoir of the SARS virus, not the civet cat (7). Indeed, the SARS pandemic showcased just how rapidly viral evolution can occur. A mutation in the receptor-binding domain (RBD) of a gene known as the spike protein appears to have enhanced the virus’ ability to infect humans (7); indeed this very gene has been implicated before in the ability of viruses to adopt to novel hosts. In the case of this virus, the civet cat was an unwitting intermediate host of a viral spillover from bats that made the transition to humans.

From MSNBC: A civet cat at a wild-game market in Guangzhou, capital of the Guangdong province

It seems like a random fluke, just an evolutionary anomaly in the viral world. A small mutation and a viral protein is suddenly able to bind just a little bit better to a human cell receptor and slink into our cells. And perhaps it would remain just a stroke of bad luck in the viral immunology world except that this isn’t the first time it’s happened. And if the history of infectious diseases is anything to go by, nor will it be the first – just last year we were introduced to influenza H5N1, the ignominiously named “swine flu”. Probably best to stick with a street-meat hot dog as opposed to bushmeat wild dog for the time being.

There is a lot of really fantastic research exploring this issue and much more, including how man-made problems such as deforestation, climate-change, logging, agriculture and even civil conflict have increased contact between humans and wild life. Indeed, bushmeat plays just a small role in zoonotic EIDs. There are complex ecological, biological and social factors involved in disease transmission beyond simply human-animal contact; the host, vector and the pathogen itself are at the whim of the environment, the diversity of human cultures and behaviors, and, as previously mentioned, sheer luck.

Just a tiny quibble: dengue/DHF is not a zoonosis- humans are the reservoir.

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/bodyhorrors/ bodyhorrors

Hey Andrew, thank you so much for the well wishes! So dengue/DHF and zoonosis, huh. Humans are indeed the principle reservoir but monkeys can serve as one too. The original reservoir appears to be African monkeys but what really matters in terms of the life cycle and transmission of the virus is the human-mosquito aspect. You can click here for where I got my info if you’re interested. I guess I didn’t explain myself too clearly – that list of diseases, including dengue/DHF, have emerged from enzootic foci. Though monkeys are no longer the primary reservoir for dengue, the emphasis should have been on their origin from animals. Thank you for keeping me on toes!

Body Horrors

Body Horrors looks at the history, anthropology and geography of infectious diseases and parasites.

About Rebecca Kreston

Rebecca Kreston is an infectious disease scholar trained in microbiology and epidemiology. She obtained her Biology degree from Reed College and her Masters of Science in Tropical Medicine from Tulane University. She's lived in tropical jungles, beaches and deserts around the world and has been exposed to several of the diseases that she studies. She currently lives in New Orleans, is a fourth year medical student and regularly battles insects of the Diptera, Siphonaptera and Hymenoptera orders.